Understanding Iraq: Initial Assessment (Update Three: Model: Small Wars and the Theory of Games)
Assessment
Given the available information, I conclude that Iraq was in a state of near collapse prior to the American Invasion. Our prolonged occupation only further exasperated the ethnic, sectarian, tribal, and religious tensions, and the forecast is that Iraq will head into civil war. But, the Iraqis must be left to determine their own path to peace without further intervention. At most, we can contain the violence by blocking the borders, but we should not pick a winner in this fight.
Intent
This is just one assessment for consideration to be examined for accuracy. It is by no means the truth, but it is important to explore this hypothesis. This is part of a much larger on-going work, but given the urgency of today, I felt it necessary to share my initial findings.
Purpose
The Logic and Method of Collaborative Design by Brigadier General Huba Wass de Czege
The logic and method of design outlined in this paper is first and foremost a collective research methodology for considering the best available information to make sense of what is known in order to construct an explicit and shared hypothesis of the very unique, dynamic and complex power and influence networks that pertain to the mission and how to act through them to take best advantage of the inherent situational potential for change. It is also a collective methodology for continually refining the command's understanding of them, and for facilitating collective adaptation accordingly.
Assumptions
Methodology
Mixed methods generated from 1. 120,000 person census of Iraqi populace, 60 key leader interviews, and over 300 tactical interrogations in Diyala River Valley by 5-73 Recon from Aug 2006-Nov 07, 2. Open source scanning and American Operational Summaries Dec 07-Present, 3. Interviews with select Iraqi citizens in December 2011, 4. Select Articles from SWJ including Richard Buchanan’s Rural versus Urban Insurgency , Malcolm Nance's The Basrah Gambit, and John W. Jones’ How We Lost the Peace in Iraq, 5. Select books including Mark Kukis’s Voices From Iraq and Nir Rosen’s The Triumph of Martyrs.
Model: Small Wars and the Theory of Games
A hybrid of Maynard Smith's ESS, John Nash's Arbitration, and Warden's third ring
Analysis
In the mid 1990’s, Saddam barely managed to contain his internal security threats, and Iraq was deteriorating rapidly due to the cumulative effects of the Iran-Iraq war, the invasion of Kuwait and subsequent American intervention, global economic restrictions, and military containment strategy. In 2003, we just failed to understand Iraq or perhaps we overestimated our own abilities.
Saddam ruled by layer upon layer of Soviet and Nazi styled heavy-handed suppression and pacification. In the most nihilistic fashion, uneducated and violent fighters were recruited out of the Diyala River Valley to serve in the Fedayeen, Saddam’s version of Hitler’s Schutzstaffel or Stalin’s secret police. Saddam’s government was built on a house of sand, and it was only a matter of time before it collapsed.
In eastern Diyala province, The Council, a Sunni based Wahhabi separatist movement not affiliated with Al-Qaida, were mobilizing, recruiting, and training a shadow government/counter-state essentially carving out a semi-autonomous region. Coupled with the Kurdish resistance in the North and competing Shia factions in the South, groups like The Council would have eventual forced an Iraqi revolution.
Groups like The Council will now provoke new tensions in Iraq with the American withdrawal. This crisis will start in Diyala province, the center of gravity for the Sunni Resistance in Iraq, nested along the old Silk Road. While the Iraq Surge suppressed their efforts, The Council merely withdrew to the countryside to regroup, refit, and prepare for the long war.
Instead, Iraq faced nearly a decade of bloody occupation and will have to overcome the physical, mental, and emotional tolls that are the secondary and tertiary effects of current U.S. foreign policy. Specifically, today, over 600,000 Iraqis are externally displaced, an unknown number internally displaced, at least 100,000 killed, another 1,000,000 wounded, and millions of young men and women have grown up knowing only war.
Our efforts at treating a “gunshot wound” as prescribed by General David Petraeus’ Field Manual 3-24 Counterinsurgency only prolonged the suffering and missed the cancer.
Provoked by decades by Saddam, the initial invasion for regime change was justified, but our continued intervention only made Iraq worse. The Iraqis must find their own way.